Canada is still a rock nation--for now, anyway.

Nielsen Music Canada has just released its summary of 2017. I’ve taken the liberty of sorting through all the numbers and pulled out some of the more interesting ones. (Well, interesting to me, anyway.)

41.3% of the year’s vinyl was sold in the 4th quarter

The favourite day for Canadians to stream music is Friday. The most popular day for streaming video is Saturday.

Rap saw a 98% increase in on-demand streaming in 2017. Of all genres, it’s the fastest-rising in terms of popularity and consumption.

By now (i.e. mid-January), Canadians are streaming a billion songs a week.

The most-played song on Canadian radio was “Shape of You” from Ed Sheeran, which was played 123,000 times. It was followed by The Weeknd and “I Feel It Coming” (94,000) and “Something Just Like This,” the collaboration between The Chainsmokers and Coldplay (91,000 plays). If you’re wondering about “Despacito,” it finished well down the list with a total of 79,000 plays.

The artist with the most cumulative number of song plays on Canadian radio? The Weeknd with 269,000 spins. Yes, you heard him a lot in 2017.

Now let’s concentrate on rock and all its flavours.

If you crunch all the consumption numbers (it’s complicated weighted system used by the industry that involves sales, streams and more), the number one most-consumed rock artist in Canada in 2017 was Metallica. The top five looks like this:

Metallica

Imagine Dragons

Tragically Hip

The Beatles

Coldplay

The top five rock albums (again based on the aforementioned industry consumption formula) in Canada last year were:

Imagine Dragons, “Evolve”

Metallica, “Hardwired…To Self-Destruct”

Tragically Hip, “Yer Favourites”

Arcade Fire, “Everything Now”

Guns ‘N Roses, “Greatest Hits”

The top five rock songs were:

Imagine Dragons, “Believer”

Imagine Dragons, “Thunder”

Portugal. The Man, “Feel It Still”

Twenty One Pilots, “Heathens”

Rag ‘N Bone Man, “Human”

And finally, the top rock songs on the radio:

Imagine Dragons, “Believer” (played 73,000 times)

Portugal. The Man, “Feel It Still (60,000)

Coleman Hell, “Fireproof” (33,000)

Strumbellas, “Spirits” (31,000)

Imagine Dragons, “Thunder” (30,000)

When it came to live music:

38% of Canadians attended some kind of concert

24% went to a festival

14% took in a club event with a live DJ

59% of all music spending goes to live events

Still want more analysis? Happy to help.

When you consider all the various metrics, no artist was bigger in Canada than Ed Sheerhan. He also sold the most physical albums with 229,000 copies, 200,000 of which were his most recent album, “Divide.”

Taylor Swift’s “Reputation” sold 128,000 units, which was good for second place. Third went to Metallica with 112,000.

The Beatles sold 141,000 physical albums and 138,000 individual tracks. Add in streaming and they were the tenth most-successful act in the country last year.

The top Canadian artist? Drake. No contest. The man is a monster when it comes to streaming (over 600 million!)

The Tragically Hip sold 138,000 physical albums last year, good for sixth spot on the list.

The top digital album? Ed Sheeran and “Divide” with 106,000.

Shania Twain’s “Now” sold more copies on CD than any other album with 100,000 copies.

Ed Sheeran’s “Divide” sold the most on vinyl with 4,900 units. The second-most-popular vinyl record? Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” (4,000) and The Beatles “Sgt. Pepper” (3,900). If you want to go deeper into this list, go here.

What does all this mean? Well, if you look at these charts, Canada is still very much a rock nation–specifically an alt-rock country. Of all the individual music genres, it’s the biggest.